GoofGoof
Premium Member
I think you are missing my point. I’m not interested in convincing people or reaching them anymore. That ship has sailed. It didn’t work. Every time you “reached” someone they just changed the argument. The same people who need convincing will be told they have to find a new job, can’t go on a cruise or go to a theme park or a ballgame unless they are vaccinated. How they feel and what they think they know is not relevant. You have 2 choices take the vaccine or face the consequences of not being able to do certain things. There’s no debating it, no arguing semantics and no moving goalposts. The choice is yours (not yours specifically since you already chose but the unvaccinated).It isn't pointless. I just got off the phone with my friend who was hesitant and then finally got J&J for him and his wife. Well, his wife has mild COVID and he said the vaccines are BS and don't work.
They were sold as making you immune, not as reducing severity of illness. That change in semantics is going to make it harder to reach the still hesitant. It's hard to justify forcing people to get it if it doesn't prevent infection and spread in a high percentage of people.
I preferred a different path than this. I wanted people to decide for themselves. That plan failed. I bought into the hype that if we dropped masks for fully vaccinated people we would see a wave of new people getting vaccinated. It was a total fraud and a lie. The daily vaccination numbers actually declined. Back in the Spring when I said I preferred a plan where we don’t require vaccines or use vaccine passports for anyone and we let people decide for themselves I was asked by some people here what happens if we don’t get enough vaccinated that way. My answer back then was we move to plan B. We are on plan B now. Plan B involves vaccine passports for certain large group activities and vaccine requirements for workplaces, colleges and eventually for children’s schools.